Wednesday, November 6, 2019
How to Reverse-Outline Your First Draft
How to Reverse-Outline Your First Draft  How to Reverse-Outline Your First Draft  How to Reverse-Outline Your First Draft                                      By Mark Nichol                                            	  You know that producing an outline is an effective strategy for helping you organize your writing. Whether the content is a novel, an interview, a review, or any other form of prose, preceding the actual writing with some sort of framework  a hierarchical vertical list, a bullet list, an interconnected web of words or phrases  provides a structural scheme.  But have you ever used a reverse outline?  A reverse outline is an evaluative tool you create after youââ¬â¢ve written the content. Although any kind of outline is suitable for this task, for your first reverse outline, use the traditional roman numeral/roman alphabet structure.  If youââ¬â¢re reverse-outlining a novel or an essay of more than a few pages, start with a single chapter or a section so you donââ¬â¢t overwhelm yourself.  Number each paragraph. On a separate sheet of paper, or in a new online file, list the main point (I), followed by the ancillary points (A, B, C). Rinse and repeat, on or in a single document, for each paragraph.  Once youââ¬â¢ve completed the outline, review it and determine whether a paragraph is weighed down by more than one point, whether the points youââ¬â¢ve identified are the ones you want to emphasize, and whether any points are superfluous or misplaced.  In addition, consider whether the outlineââ¬â¢s organization, and by extension the chapter or articleââ¬â¢s organization, reflect your intentions. If not, decide whether you need to revise your intent or the output. (Hint: Itââ¬â¢s much easier to adapt a topic or a thesis statement to a piece of writing than the reverse.)  Reverse outlining helps you reorganize not only paragraphs but also the entire work. On a paragraph level, determine whether you need to combine, divide, insert, delete, or move. For the work as a whole, revise as necessary to build an argument or carry a narrative.  Repeat the process as necessary for a longer piece  and if, for example, an extensive article has five sections that youââ¬â¢ve reverse-outlined in as many steps, reverse-outline the whole article as well.                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the Fiction Writing category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:50 Idioms About Legs, Feet, and ToesComma Before ButHow Many Sentences in a Paragraph?    
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